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Tuesday, Feb. 16, 2021
Volume 156 No. 8 SERVING SAN JOSE STATE UNIVERSITY SINCE 1934
WWW.SJSUNEWS.COM/SPARTAN_DAILY
YAMI SUN | SPARTAN DAILY
A Black Lives Matter sign sits with art supplies on Black Liberation and Collective Knowledge (B.L.A.C.K.) Outreach’s table during a demonstration at San Jose City Hall Monday.
Community honors Black history By Ruth Noemi Aguilar SENIOR STAFF WRITER
To come out here all the time and only be angry would be too much on our own mental states and everybody else’s mental state. Sometimes you got to dance it off.
Black Liberation and Collective Knowledge (B.L.A.C.K.) Outreach members, a local social justice organization, hosted a community barbecue on Monday in front of San Jose City Hall. The event, called Black History Month: The Kickoff, celebrated Black History Month and provided food to community members, according to the organizations Feb. 3 Lou Dimes Instagram post. Black Liberation and Collective Knowledge (B.L.A.C.K.) Outreach president “I definitely am trying to teach my kids about Black history and about Black liberation and that’s really why we’re here,” said Adriana Chavez Empowerment Radical Optimism (H.E.R.O) Lopez, a San Jose resident who brought her Tent members, to bring snacks and refreshments two kids to the event. for event participants. B.L.A.C.K. Outreach collaborated with Human H.E.R.O Tent is a volunteer organization
that provides resources to Bay Area activist groups, according to its website. H.E.R.O Tent barbecued meat provided by Grace Baptist Church, which received it as a donation. Both groups gave freshly cooked meals, including hamburgers, chicken and hotdogs to the unhoused community in Downtown San Jose. They planned to give leftovers to the unhoused communities near the Guadalupe River Park. B.L.A.C.K Outreach members set up food stations near city hall where people lined up to receive meals. Next to the stations were Black empowerment chalk art pieces with phrases such as “Black is Beautiful,” “Celebrating Black Histor y” and “Power to the People.” “You know, we are out here kinda protesting DEMONSTRATION | Page 2
Angela Davis speaks at SJSU webinar STAFF WRITER
Angela Davis, an educator, author and political activist for Black feminism, socialism and the abolishment of racial capitalism, spoke Thursday at the San Jose State Human Rights Institute’s final webinar in its three-part lecture series honoring Davis and her work. Sociology junior Tiffany Yep said finally hearing from Davis after the previous events was “informative and powerful.” Yep said she was inspired to attend the series after the reignition of Black Lives Matter
demonstrations in San Jose increased her dedication to feminism and civil rights. Two representatives of Silicon Valley De-Bug spoke briefly alongside Davis on police brutality and prison abolition. Silicon Valley De-Bug is a San Jose-based advocacy organization that voices stories and campaigns for community members and was a stakeholder for Davis’ series. Sharon Watkins, a Silicon Valley De-Bug representative, said her 23-year-old son Philip Watkins suffered a mental health emergency and was killed at his home by the
GARDEN CALENDAR
San Jose Police Department in 2015. Watkins told Davis and webinar attendees that she has continued to make policy changes at the state level to expunge the laws and lawmakers who turn “blind eyes to police violence in our communities and across the state.” Davis said she was happy to see the possibilities for change in San Jose. She said the overpresence of police and the criminalization of young people in schools should be a primary focal point in the community to
The idea is to imagine and hopefully create a society that no longer relies on these horrendous institutions of violence and punishment.
Angela Davis
political activist for Black feminism, socialism and the abolishment of racial capitalism
spark radical change. the schools into institutions of “We all need to focus on punishment.” getting police out of schools,” Other contributors and Davis said during the webinar. “They [police] are transforming DAVIS | Page 2
2021
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